Löydetty 65 Tulokset: Do Not Be Angry
And now you come forward in the spirit of your fathers, the heirs and scions of their guilt, to make the Lord more angry with Israel than ever. (Numbers 32, 14)
Listening to this talk of yours, the Lord was angry with you, and he took an oath (Deuteronomy 1, 34)
And what marvel that the people should feel his displeasure, when the Lord was angry with me too for your sakes? There is no entering there, he told me, for thee either. (Deuteronomy 1, 37)
But the Lord, through your fault, was angry with me, and would not listen to me. Enough, he said, speak to me of this no more. (Deuteronomy 3, 26)
Here, they said to Jacob, are the decrees thou must obey, here, Israel, is the law that governs thee. When thou art angry, Lord, it is theirs to offer incense, and burn sacrifice upon thy altar. (Deuteronomy 33, 10)
But now Israel broke its faith by turning the forfeited plunder to their own use. Achan, a man of Juda, descended from Zare through Charmi and Zabdi, took some of the plunder for himself, and God was angry with the people of Israel. (Joshua 7, 1)
But he pleaded once again, Do not be angry with me if I put thee to one more test, still with the fleece for my proof. This time, let the fleece remain dry, while the rest of the ground is wet with dew. (Judges 6, 39)
When their fathers and brethren come to make angry complaints of you, we will say, Forgive them; they did not claim to carry the maids off by right of conquest. You provoked them to this by refusing your consent.✻ (Judges 21, 22)
And when the other woman said, No, it is thy child that is dead, mine that is alive, she persisted in answering, Thou liest; it is my child that lives, thine that is dead. Such was the angry debate they held in the king’s presence. (1 Kings 3, 22)
So the Lord was angry with Solomon for playing him false, when he, the Lord God of Israel, had twice appeared to him, (1 Kings 11, 9)
But there was a prophet of the Lord dwelling there at this time, Oded by name, who went out to meet the army on their way into the city, and expostulated with them. Here are the men of Juda, said he, left at your mercy, only because the Lord, the God of your fathers, is angry with them; and you have made murderous use of your victory; the tale of your cruelties mounts up to heaven. (2 Chronicles 28, 9)
What wonder if the Lord was angry with Juda and Jerusalem, doomed them to unrest, and ruin, and disgrace, such as you see all around? (2 Chronicles 29, 8)
